Douglas Murray is a bestselling author and award-winning journalist based in London. He has written for numerous publications including the Telegraph, Spectator, Wall Street Journal and Sunday Times. He is a columnist for Standpoint magazine and the Director of the Centre for Social Cohesion, a Westminster think-tank which studies radicalisation and extremism in Britain.

Why are Islamic nutters in nightdresses so obsessed with gays?

If anyone missed Channel 4's Dispatches the other night, can I very much recommend it? "Britain's Islamic Republic" is available here and is vital viewing. Andrew Gilligan's programme will be shocking even for those of you who, like me, thought they couldn't be shocked by this sort of thing any more.

One interesting addition, if I may, which Brett at Harry's Place also points out here. Though there has been a lot of press coverage of the documentary, there has been far too little outrage about the opening sequences showing the East London Mosque (yes, that one, favoured by Boris Johnson and Prince Charles) as the venue for events at which the most virulent anti-gay and anti-women perverts preach. I know that's no surprise, but stay with me a moment.

One preacher, an evidently lunatic semi-literate called Abdul Karim Hattin, is shown playing what he calls "a game" called "spot the fag". For this tittersome "game" he uses a slide to show a picture of Elton John beside one of the dead rapper "2-pac" (Tupac Shakur).

This confuses me a lot. I think the point this unfunny bigot is trying to make is that you can somehow recognise Elton John as gay because of the way he looks. But surely there is some mistake.

In the photo Elton John is wearing a respectable casual red top. Tupac on the other hand is topless, rather conspicuously ripped, and his naked torso glistening with sweat. Now I don't want to spoil this "game", but to my, not untrained, eyes I'd have identified "2-pac" as gay in this gay identity-parade.

But as it turns out, Mr Hattin also thinks (though for baffling reasons) that Tupac's image was somehow gay. I'm not sure I go along with this. In any case, Mad-as-a-Hattin is saying all this whilst wearing what looks to me distinctly like an elderly lady's nightdress.

This is not the first time that I have wondered about the weirdly homosexual-obsession of onstensibly homophobic Muslim preachers. The picture of "2-pac" stays up just a little too long. It is almost as though Hattin could not resist the temptation to share the photo of this glistening black male body with his Muslim "brothers" for as long as possible. Which as always, says more about him than it does about anyone else.

And as I'll never fail to say: only in a mosque. Only in a mosque in Britain could routine hatred like this pass by unnoticed and largely unobjected to.